[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I would like to maintain a certain homogeneity through the site, having a
> unique for all the pages, and a at the homepage using it
for the
> same level of heading on the next pages ... and it might happen that
a certain page won't have an
> for example.
Hi E
: Re: [WSG] headings and accessibility norms
Look
at it as an outline and perhaps it becomes clearer.
H1
Main heading
H2 Section heading
H2 Section heading
H3 Sub-section heading
H4
Sub-Sub-section heading
H2 Section heading
H1
Another Main heading?
G'day
I've got two problems complying those norms:
I would like to maintain a certain homogeneity through the site, having a
unique for all the pages, and a at the homepage using it for the
same level of heading on the next pages.
Question: why h4? What's wrong with h2?
Another doubt
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I've got two problems complying those norms:
>
> I would like to maintain a certain homogeneity through the
> site, having a
> unique for all the pages, and a at the homepage
> using it for the
> same level of heading on the next pages.
I think that's going a bit beyond
can developers slack on? Keep it
tidy.
Eddie
http://blog.tn38.net/
-Original
Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 21 July 2005 14:18
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: [WSG] headings and accessibility norms
Hello list,
I'm having some troubles in understanding the standards of
webaccessibility according to the headings.
On one side, there is the point of W3 saying:
"Since some users skim through a document by navigating its headings, it
is important to use them appropriately to convey document struc